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Francis Eustache

Researcher at University of Paris

Publications -  565
Citations -  25058

Francis Eustache is an academic researcher from University of Paris. The author has contributed to research in topics: Episodic memory & Semantic memory. The author has an hindex of 80, co-authored 529 publications receiving 22589 citations. Previous affiliations of Francis Eustache include PSL Research University & University of Caen Lower Normandy.

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Characteristics and evolution of writing impairmant in Alzheimer's disease

TL;DR: This work would tend to confirm the hypothesis proposed by Rapcsak et al. concerning the development of agraphia, and would emphasize the importance of peripheral impairments, especially grapho-motor impairments which come in addition to the lexical and phonological impairments.
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The Neural Basis of Intrusions in Free Recall and Cued Recall: A PET Study in Alzheimer's Disease

TL;DR: This study was designed to map in Alzheimer's disease patients the correlations between resting-state brain glucose utilization measured by PET and the number of intrusions obtained by means of a specially designed episodic memory test separately in free recall and in cued recall.
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How aging affects sleep-dependent memory consolidation?

TL;DR: This review outlines the mechanisms governing sleep-dependent memory consolidation, and the crucial points of this complex process that may dysfunction and result in impaired memory consolidation in aging.
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Memory disorders in Alzheimer's disease and the organization of human memory.

TL;DR: Using the memory dysfunctions of patients with AD to test the validity of the Squire and Zola-Morgan parallel organization model of the memory and the Tulving hierarchical model, several simple dissociations are demonstrated which are for the greater part compatible with the two models.
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The neural substrates of musical memory revealed by fMRI and two semantic tasks

TL;DR: Two tasks using a congruence task involving automatic semantic retrieval and a familiarity task requiring more thorough semantic retrieval revealed activation of the left inferior frontal and posterior middle temporal cortices, suggesting that executive and selection processes are common to both verbal and musical retrievals.